Dedham’s Stone Secrets Part 1/The Dedham Inn

One of my favorite things to do is to find remnants of the past around town and then research the history of that location. Old stone pillars and walls that seem at odds with nearby more modern dwellings are usually signs of a lost building and an interesting tale. This is the first in a series of posts about several Dedham sites with a hidden past.

On the western side of Court Street near Highland Street stand three homes built in the early 1950s. The split-level/ranch design is typical of the time period, but the granite posts that stand on the lawns of these homes are from a much earlier period and indicate that something grand once stood here. Fortunately, the history of the previous structure is well documented and with some help from the staff at the Dedham Museum and Archive and a little sleuthing in the digital newspaper archives I am able to present the story of the Richards House, also known as the Dedham Inn.

Richards House in the late nineteenth century (Courtesy of Dedham Museum and Archive)

The house was built in 1791, and was purportedly designed by famed architect Charles Bullfinch, designer of the nearby Haven House (Dedham Community House), Massachusetts State House, as well as many other historic buildings. Ownership passed through several families before Boston hardware merchant Samuel Richards purchased the house and acreage in 1802. It would remain in the Richards family for over 100 years before being sold, enlarged and converted into an inn in 1915.

1923 ad for the Inn
Postcard from the Inn with handwritten question “Bullfinch architect?” The Bullfinch attribution was family lore and not actually documented elsewhere.

The newly established Dedham Inn quickly became a popular venue for social gatherings such as anniversary parties and wedding showers. An early guest was 17 year-old Hollywood starlet Mary Miles Minter and her mother/manager Charlotte Shelby who arrived in August 1919 to film a silent version of the book Anne of Green Gables. Earlier that summer, a scouting team from RealArt Pictures had chosen Dedham for location filming, with the landmark Fairbanks House serving as the farmhouse where orphan Anne Shirley lived with Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert. Also staying at the Inn was the film’s 49-year old director William Desmond Taylor. During their stay at the Inn, despite their age difference, Mary developed a serious (one-sided) crush on the dashing British director. Taylor would be murdered in his Hollywood bungalow in February 1922, and the ensuing investigation would reveal correspondence from the young actress that provoked a scandal that eventually ended Minter’s career and most likely caused copies of the film to be destroyed, making it one of thousands of missing silent films. The murder of Taylor remains unsolved to this day. The complete story of this 1919 filming is featured in my book Dedham: Historic and Heroic Tales from Shiretown.

Cartoons in the Boston Post published at the time of the filming of Anne of Green Gables

Its close proximity to the courthouse made the Inn a gathering place for anyone with court business including attorneys, jury members and judges. Throughout the famed 1921 murder trial of Nicola Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti, jurors were housed overnight in the grand jury room of the Superior Courthouse and took their meals at the Dedham Inn. During the appeals process for the convicted men, it was reported that trial judge Webster Thayer had made numerous prejudicial statements outside of the courtroom throughout the trial; many of these statements were made to reporters during lunch breaks at the Inn. In a clemency request to Governor Alvan Fuller in May 1927, affidavits were filed by several reporters who had heard the judge’s remarks firsthand. Globe reporter Frank Sibley wrote that Judge Thayer would often discuss the case with reporters while gathered in the Inn’s private dining room, and several witnesses, including Sibley, recalled how on one walk back to the courthouse, the judge angrily denounced defense attorney Fred Moore by stating “I’ll show them that no long-haired anarchist from California can run this court!” All appeals on behalf of the accused failed and Sacco and Vanzetti were executed on August 23, 1927.

Judge Webster Thayer
The Inn in the 1920s (Courtesy Dedham Museum and Archive)

In the early morning hours of February 6, 1939, the Dedham Fire Department responded to a call from inn owner George Thorley. The entire department, under the direction of Chief Henry Harrigan, fought the flames for five hours, battling slippery conditions and icy equipment in a vain effort to save the landmark. While Thorley, his wife and daughters and three guests all managed to escape, Josephine the family’s cocker spaniel, was unable to get out. The beloved pet was credited with saving the occupants of the Inn by waking them with her barking before the fire got out of control. On the morning after the fire the walls of the historic inn still stood, but fire had gutted the interior and the building was razed. A faulty furnace was cited as the likely cause of the fire. The property was subdivided and the three single family homes that stand there now were built between 1950-1951. Today, four granite fence posts are all that remain of this once elegant and well-known property. Those posts, along with this post, remind us of the Dedham that used to be.

Boston Herald, February 6, 1939
Explore posts in the same categories: Dedham Then and Now, Lost Dedham

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14 Comments on “Dedham’s Stone Secrets Part 1/The Dedham Inn”

  1. Kathy's avatar Kathy Says:

    Another very interesting Dedham story. So many times we pass by these markers, usually granite, but don’t know the story behind them. Thanks.

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Dave (in MA)'s avatar Dave (in MA) Says:

    RIP Josephine. 😔

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  3. Judy Neiswander's avatar Judy Neiswander Says:

    So sad!!!

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  4. Brian Keaney's avatar Brian Keaney Says:

    Am I right to assume Richards Street was named for this family? I think it was laid out in the 1850s or 60s (and certainly by the 1870s when my family owned the land backing up to Lowder Brook).

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  5. Michael Nee's avatar Michael Nee Says:

    Great article!!

    Thank you Mjn

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  6. susanflanagan472's avatar susanflanagan472 Says:

    https://www.ancestry.com/imageviewer/collections/2469/images/8768430?treeid=&personid=&hintid=&usePUB=true&_phsrc=FHW1130&_phstart=successSource&usePUBJs=true&pId=461384863

    1885 Dedham Directory, Residence

    Page 93 of this Dedham Directory lists individual Richards and addresses.

    I have enjoyed this investigation to the days of Dedham Inn. Thank you!

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  7. susanflanagan472's avatar susanflanagan472 Says:

    I realized my previous post took one to the Ancestry link only.

    My apologies.

    Here is the list from page 93 of 1885 Dedham Directory for Richards living in Dedham Massachusetts.

    Richards, Mrs. Abiathar, Spring

    Richards, Mrs. Edward F., Richards

    Richards, Mrs. Edward M., cor Court and Highland

    Richards, Frederic, machinist B&P repair shops, B; res Washington, n Weatherbee

    Richards, Frederic, 2nd, weaver, Chauncy, ED

    Richards, Henry W., bookkeeper Atlas National Bank, 8 Sears Building, B; res Court, n Marsh

    Richards, Lewis A., pork dealer, High, W D

    Richards, Miss Louisa, res Miss Ann Colburn, High, n Pond W D

    Richards, Reuben R., lab. High. Up. Vil

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